Plates, Plumes and Planetary Processes

Mechanisms of crustal growth in large igneous provinces: The north Atlantic province as a case study
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Published:January 01, 2007
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CiteCitation
Laurent Geoffroy, Charles Aubourg, Jean-Paul Callot, Jean-Alix Barrat, 2007. "Mechanisms of crustal growth in large igneous provinces: The north Atlantic province as a case study", Plates, Plumes and Planetary Processes, Gillian R. Foulger, Donna M. Jurdy
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The mechanisms of magma crust accretion at large igneous provinces (LIPs) are questioned using arguments based on the north Atlantic case. Published and new data on the calculated flow vectors within dike swarms feeding the early traps and subsequent seaward-dipping reflector lavas suggest that most of the mafic magmas forming the north Atlantic LIP transited through a small number of igneous centers. The magma was injected centrifugally in dike swarms at some distance away from individual igneous centers along the trend of the maximum horizontal stress acting in the crust, feeding lava piles via dikes intersecting the ground surface. This...
- Atlantic Ocean
- basalts
- continental crust
- convection
- crust
- dike swarms
- Europe
- geochemistry
- Great Britain
- Hebrides
- Highland region Scotland
- Iceland Plume
- igneous rocks
- Inner Hebrides
- Inverness-shire Scotland
- Isle of Skye
- large igneous provinces
- mafic magmas
- magmas
- magmatism
- North Atlantic
- oceanic crust
- preferred orientation
- Scotland
- stress fields
- structural analysis
- transition zones
- trap rocks
- United Kingdom
- volcanic rocks
- volcanism
- Western Europe
- North Atlantic igneous province